Subterritory Discovery! Name pending because I'm not sure what children would name pumpkins xD
As the ground slopes upwards to the mountains, the misty forests begin to thin out and the land under-foot begins to dry up. By some great coincidence, this has become a particularly fertile location for Relic Lore's largest —and perhaps only— pumpkin patch. In early spring these gourds begin to germinate, and come early fall there are hundreds strewn haphazardly for a quarter mile. The sizes and colors of the orange fruits vary wildly without anyone around to maintain the quality of the crop. Several large ones do, however, manage to grow every year. By the end of October this is a particularly well traveled spot by crows and other birds looking to feast on the over-ripened pumpkins. Four legged creatures, though, must be careful to watch where they step, as the network of vines is extensive and wild. In the off season, the land is just a simple stretch of lush field. Click here for a picture! Click here for location!
It was with wide eyes that Triell's daughter stumbled out of the woods and into the most bizarre place she had ever been.
Then again, her home had begun, in these last few weeks, to look progressively stranger as the world started to become less green. She was not quite sure what to make of it. Navigating became much harder for her when the landmarks did not look the same. She nearly missed the moss-carpeted rock as she wandered beyond the safety of the Bend territory, not expecting the bryophyte to look quite so brown and shriveled. Light poured in through the waxing gold and crimson canopy in ways that it had been unable to through the heavy green foliage. It was like she was seeing her home for the first time.
But this was really something different.
The first thing there was to notice was the color. In the lingering haze of the morning, the world nearly glowed with the brightness of this color that was kind of like the leaves, but also much stronger than the leaves. She wondered if they were boulders. Her eyes trailed up the sloping ground towards the mountains. The mountains were, in the absent of a sunset, quite colorless. Nervously, she approached one of the awkward colored lumps. It had uniform lumpy sections organized vertically. Rocks had lines and patterns, but not like this. Shaking with concentration, she lifted a muddy paw high in the air nearly to her shoulder.
Thwack!
A strangely hollow sound greeted her. It was definitely not a rock. For, if it had been, she certainly would be howling in pain. Grimacing, the girl took a seat beside the orange-not-boulder that was nearly half her size. "What on earth..."